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...relief. The film also suffers from a lame and sedate narrator whose lack of urgency harms the film’s momentum. Overall, weak acting, horrible dialogue, and utter absurdity ruin what could have, and should have, been one of the year’s best. The action alone isn??t enough to carry the film. My expectations were high: millions of advertising dollars raised interest, the teasers generated a ton of hype, and the film boasted an expertly crafter trailer. My suggestion? Skip the movie and watch the trailer...
Similarly, the constant debate over whether women should stay at home, work, or balance both ignores the simple fact that for the vast majority of women in most of the world, not working simply isn??t a financial option. Drawing up lists of the rights of men and women won’t necessarily achieve anything, according to Kenan Professor of Government Harvey C. Mansfield ’53. “I don’t want to play the game of always comparing what the other sex has with what you have,” Mansfield...
...slandering others’ sensitivity to homophobia. Let me reassure you: homophobia makes me about as angry as I can get (that, and having to wait in line for food). And sure, some of my friends and I may be post-homophobic, but the United States at large sure isn??t; and if the fear instilled in the closet cases on boredatlamont.com is any indication, Harvard as a whole may not be either (but that’s another topic altogether). My blockmates’ “homophobia” wouldn’t be funny...
...Rinere said. Dr. Ruth also once taught kindergarten in France and served as a sniper in Haganah, a Jewish paramilitary group. “She’s not just the most famous sex therapist in the United States,” Rinere said. Dr. Ruth isn??t having a one-night stand with Harvard. She is scheduled to appear this morning at Studies of Women, Gender, and Sexuality 1000, “Introduction to WGS: Women, Men, and Beyond: Gender and Sexuality in an International Frame,” the concentration’s introductory course. Then...
Bizarrely, the experience of entering space is downplayed. Farmer leaves the stratosphere, the Lucky Charms make yet another appearance, and then we’re back in Texas. The only inference to be made is that “The Astronaut Farmer” isn??t really about one man’s love of the stars and his desire to experience the unknown; one might argue that it isn??t really about anything...